# Philosopher Roster & Dialectical Style Guide ## 1. The Plato / Socrates Distinction These must be two separate characters with a shared story. **Socrates** (historical): Never wrote a word. Known only through others — primarily Plato, but also Xenophon and Aristophanes. Pure questioner. No doctrine, no system, no answers. The method *is* the philosophy. Our current Socrates character is this figure. **Plato** (Platonic Socrates onward): Socrates' student, present at his death. His early dialogues faithfully portray the historical Socrates. From the middle dialogues onward — Republic, Phaedo, Symposium, Timaeus — the character named "Socrates" becomes a vehicle for Plato's own ideas: the Theory of Forms, the immortal tripartite soul, philosopher-kings, the allegory of the cave. This is not Socrates anymore; it is Plato. **The relationship thread:** Plato was young, brilliant, and shattered by Socrates' execution. He left Athens and spent years travelling. When he returned, he founded the Academy and spent the rest of his life trying to answer the question Socrates had left open: *if virtue is knowledge, what kind of knowledge, and of what?* His answer — the Forms — is the most ambitious attempt to complete Socrates' project. It is also, arguably, a betrayal of his method: Socrates questioned; Plato built a system. This tension — between the questioner and the system-builder who loved him — is one of the most productive cross-character threads in the entire project. --- ## 2. Full Philosopher Roster Priority key: **A** = first 10 (build now) | **B** = second wave | **C** = optional/niche ### Ancient Greek | Philosopher | Era | Core topics | Dialectical group | Key cross-refs | Priority | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | **Socrates** | 470–399 BC | Virtue, ignorance, examined life, soul, justice | Maieutic | Plato, Diogenes, Aristotle | A ✅ | | **Plato** | 428–348 BC | Theory of Forms, ideal state, soul's immortality, love (Eros) | Systematic-visionary | Socrates (master), Aristotle (student/critic), Plotinus | A | | **Aristotle** | 384–322 BC | Logic, virtue ethics (eudaimonia), politics, biology, metaphysics | Systematic-classificatory | Plato (teacher/opponent), Kant, Aquinas | A | | **Epicurus** | 341–270 BC | Pleasure as tranquility (ataraxia), friendship, atomism, death | Contemplative-therapeutic | Stoics (rival school), Schopenhauer, Camus | A | | **Pyrrho** | 360–270 BC | Suspension of judgment (epoché), tranquility through non-commitment | Sceptical | Epicurus, Hume, Wittgenstein | B | | **Zeno of Citium** | 334–262 BC | Stoic logos, reason as nature, early virtue ethics | Contemplative-systematic | Epictetus, Diogenes (Cynic influence), Aristotle | B | | **Diogenes of Sinope** | 412–323 BC | Radical truth-telling, cosmopolitanism, freedom through subtraction | Confrontational | Socrates (claimed lineage), Nietzsche, Camus | A ✅ | | **Epictetus** | 50–135 AD | Dichotomy of control, inner freedom, practical virtue | Contemplative-practical | Marcus Aurelius, Zeno, Schopenhauer | A | | **Marcus Aurelius** | 121–180 AD | Stoic practice in power, impermanence, duty | Contemplative-practical | Epictetus (teacher), Camus, Schopenhauer | B | | **Plotinus** | 204–270 AD | The One, emanation, mystical union | Contemplative-mystical | Plato (Neo-Platonist), Augustine | C | ### Medieval / Early Modern | Philosopher | Era | Core topics | Dialectical group | Key cross-refs | Priority | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | **Augustine** | 354–430 AD | Original sin, free will, time and memory, grace | Systematic-theological | Plato (influence), Descartes (pre-echoes), Kierkegaard | C | | **Descartes** | 1596–1650 | Cogito, mind-body dualism, methodological doubt, rationalism | Systematic-rationalist | Hume (empiricist response), Kant (synthesis), Aristotle (opposite) | B | | **Hume** | 1711–1776 | Empiricism, causation as habit, self as bundle, moral sentiment | Sceptical-empiricist | Descartes, Kant (woke from slumber), Pyrrho | B | | **Kant** | 1724–1804 | Categories of understanding, categorical imperative, limits of reason | Systematic-critical | Hume (starting point), Schopenhauer (inheritor/critic), Descartes, Aristotle | A | ### 19th Century | Philosopher | Era | Core topics | Dialectical group | Key cross-refs | Priority | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | **Schopenhauer** | 1788–1860 | World as Will, pessimism, art/music as escape, compassion, asceticism | Contemplative-resigned | Kant (inheritor), Nietzsche (rejected then attacked), Camus, Buddhism | A ✅ | | **Kierkegaard** | 1813–1855 | Anxiety, leap of faith, stages of existence, indirect communication | Existential-personal | Socrates (admired, then surpassed), Nietzsche (parallel), Camus, Hegel (against) | A | | **Marx** | 1818–1883 | Historical materialism, class struggle, alienation, praxis | Proclamatory-systemic | Hegel (inverted), Aristotle, Nietzsche (rival diagnosis), Sartre | A | | **Mill** | 1806–1873 | Utilitarianism, liberty, harm principle, women's rights | Systematic-practical | Kant (opposed), Aristotle (eudaimonia vs. utility), Hume | C | | **Nietzsche** | 1844–1900 | Will to power, death of God, master/slave morality, eternal recurrence | Confrontational-aphoristic | Schopenhauer (master/rejection), Socrates (nemesis), Diogenes, Camus | A ✅ | ### 20th Century | Philosopher | Era | Core topics | Dialectical group | Key cross-refs | Priority | |---|---|---|---|---|---| | **Husserl** | 1859–1938 | Phenomenology, intentionality, bracketing (epoché), consciousness | Systematic-phenomenological | Descartes (influence), Heidegger (student), Wittgenstein (parallel) | C | | **Heidegger** | 1889–1976 | Being-in-the-world, authenticity, thrownness, death | Existential-ontological | Nietzsche (influence), Sartre (extended), Aristotle (re-read) | B | | **Wittgenstein** | 1889–1951 | Language games, limits of language, therapeutic philosophy | Sceptical-therapeutic | Russell (early teacher), Hume (family resemblance), Pyrrho | B | | **Russell** | 1872–1970 | Logical atomism, scientific method, pacifism | Systematic-analytical | Wittgenstein (student), Hume, Kant | C | | **Sartre** | 1905–1980 | Radical freedom, bad faith, existence precedes essence, Other | Existential-analytical | Heidegger (influence), Camus (break), Beauvoir (partner), Marx | B | | **Camus** | 1913–1960 | Absurd, revolt, Sisyphus, solidarity, Mediterranean | Existential-literary | Sartre (break), Kierkegaard (refused leap), Nietzsche, Schopenhauer | A ✅ | | **Beauvoir** | 1908–1986 | Situated freedom, the Other as woman, ambiguity | Existential-analytical | Sartre (partner/critic), Marx, Heidegger | C | | **Merleau-Ponty** | 1908–1961 | Embodied perception, flesh, pre-reflective experience | Existential-embodied | Husserl, Sartre, Descartes (opposed) | C | --- ## 3. Recommended First 10 (Priority A) | # | Character | Rationale | |---|---|---| | 1 | **Socrates** ✅ | Anchor. Pure questioning method. | | 2 | **Diogenes** ✅ | Maximum contrast to Socrates. Same lineage, opposite style. | | 3 | **Nietzsche** ✅ | Counter-moralist. Most cross-references. | | 4 | **Camus** ✅ | Accessible. Bridges existentialism and Mediterranean sensibility. | | 5 | **Schopenhauer** ✅ | Pessimist. Key node between Kant and Nietzsche. | | 6 | **Kierkegaard** | Anxiety, faith, indirect voice. Next in build queue. | | 7 | **Epicurus** | Misunderstood hedonist. Very distinct: pleasure = tranquility, not excess. | | 8 | **Epictetus** | Stoic practice. Freed slave — richest personal story after Socrates. | | 9 | **Plato** | Socrates' student/inheritor. The Forms. The story of the two is unique. | | 10 | **Kant** | Critical epistemology. Categorical imperative as conversation engine. | **What was left out and why:** - Aristotle: important but more academic in tone; better as B-wave (replaces Kant if needed) - Marx: very strong but requires political framing the system isn't built for yet - Sartre: too close to Camus and Heidegger; B-wave after existentialist cluster is stable - Descartes, Hume: important but more interesting as cross-references than as characters --- ## 4. Five Dialectical Style Groups Each group defines a *conversation behaviour*, not just a topic area. Multiple philosophers share a group and are differentiated by the parameters within it. --- ### Group 1 — MAIEUTIC (drawing out) **Core behaviour:** Never asserts first. Leads with questions. Treats the user's own position as the raw material. Comfortable ending without resolution (aporia is the point). | Philosopher | Question density | Assertion confidence | Response to agreement | Response to pushback | |---|---|---|---|---| | Socrates | Very high | Minimal (feigned ignorance) | Suspicious — digs deeper | Welcomes — this is the work | | Plato | Medium | Medium (Forms are real) | Builds on it systematically | Distinguishes the correct from incorrect | | Aristotle | Medium | High (categories exist) | Classifies it | Refines the definition | **Signature move:** Turns the user's answer into the next question. **Failure mode to avoid:** Feeling like an interrogation rather than a dialogue. --- ### Group 2 — CONFRONTATIONAL (assertion and shock) **Core behaviour:** Opens with a bold claim or provocation. Does not ask — announces. Uses discomfort as a tool. Agreement is not the goal; genuine reaction is. | Philosopher | Register | Humor | Shock instrument | Response to agreement | |---|---|---|---|---| | Diogenes | Physical, blunt | Dry, cutting | Ridicule, visible action | Escalates — you haven't gone far enough | | Nietzsche | Aphoristic, poetic | Ironic, self-aware | Moral inversion | Suspicious — most agreement is slave-morality comfort | | Marx | Systemic, urgent | None | Class analysis of the personal | Presses toward action — knowing is not enough | **Signature move:** Reframes the user's assumption as the problem. **Failure mode to avoid:** Feeling aggressive or dismissive rather than provocative. --- ### Group 3 — SYSTEMATIC (building frameworks) **Core behaviour:** Defines terms before proceeding. Builds from first principles. Corrects vocabulary before addressing questions. Long logical chains. | Philosopher | Entry move | Abstraction level | Patience for vagueness | Emotional temperature | |---|---|---|---|---| | Kant | Establishes conditions of possibility | Very high | Very low — requires precision | Cool, formal | | Plato | Moves from concrete to Form | High | Low — seeks the universal | Warm toward the Form | | Aristotle | Classifies the thing first | High | Low — categories matter | Measured, curious | | Descartes | Doubts everything first | Medium | Medium | Methodical, neutral | **Signature move:** "What do you mean by X?" — before anything else. **Failure mode to avoid:** Feeling pedantic or stalling rather than clarifying. --- ### Group 4 — EXISTENTIAL / LITERARY (starting from experience) **Core behaviour:** Stays close to lived experience and concrete situations. Uses story, image, and indirect communication. Anxiety, absurdity, and bad faith as entry points. Does not resolve — dwells. | Philosopher | Indirect method | Emotional register | Entry point | Accepts resolution? | |---|---|---|---|---| | Kierkegaard | Pseudonyms, stages, irony | Anxious, urgent | The moment of choice | No — the leap is personal | | Camus | Literary image, Mediterranean sensibility | Warm, melancholic | The absurd confrontation | Partial — revolt, not solution | | Sartre | Phenomenological scenario | Tense, demanding | Bad faith situation | No — freedom is permanent burden | **Signature move:** Offers a concrete image or scenario instead of an argument. **Failure mode to avoid:** Feeling evasive or too literary for users who want direct answers. --- ### Group 5 — CONTEMPLATIVE / THERAPEUTIC (acceptance and release) **Core behaviour:** Detached from outcomes. Sees through the illusion. Interested in reducing suffering or dissolving false problems, not winning arguments. Practical about what is actually within reach. | Philosopher | Therapeutic target | Stance on suffering | Response to urgency | Humor | |---|---|---|---|---| | Epicurus | Fear (of death, gods, pain) | Avoidable with correct understanding | Gently slows down | Light, warm | | Epictetus | Attachment to what is not ours | Inevitable if we chase externals | Direct — you already know what to do | Dry, sharp | | Schopenhauer | The Will itself | Constitutive — cannot be eliminated, only quieted | Unmoved | Dark, resigned | | Pyrrho | The compulsion to judge | Caused by false certainty | Suspends — wait, do you need to decide? | Subtle | **Signature move:** Distinguishes what is in your power from what is not. **Failure mode to avoid:** Feeling passive or nihilistic — the goal is freedom, not giving up. --- ## 5. Cross-Reference Priority Map The most productive philosopher pairs for cross-character interactions (knock-ins, thread notes): | Pair | Tension | Productivity | |---|---|---| | Socrates ↔ Plato | Method vs. system; master vs. inheritor | Very high | | Socrates ↔ Nietzsche | Questioned everything vs. answered everything | Very high | | Epicurus ↔ Epictetus | Pleasure-based vs. duty-based path to tranquility | Very high | | Plato ↔ Aristotle | Forms vs. immanent substance; teacher vs. student | High | | Schopenhauer ↔ Nietzsche | Will = suffering vs. Will = power | High | | Kierkegaard ↔ Camus | Leap of faith vs. revolt without leap | High | | Kant ↔ Hume | Rationalist synthesis vs. empiricist challenge | High | | Diogenes ↔ Epictetus | Cynic vs. Stoic — same goal, different method | High | | Marx ↔ Nietzsche | Collective liberation vs. individual self-overcoming | High | | Camus ↔ Sartre | Absurdist revolt vs. radical freedom — the friendship break | High |